Selected quad for the lemma: mercy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
mercy_n great_a sin_n transgression_n 3,082 5 10.1157 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A09442 Lectures vpon the three first chapters of the Reuelation: preached in Cambridge anno Dom. 1595. by Master William Perkins, and now published for the benefite of this Church, by Robert Hill Bachelor in Diuinitie. To which is added an excellent sermon, penned at the request of that noble and wise councellor, Ambrose, Earle of Warwicke: in which is proued that Rome is Babylon, and that Babylon is fallen Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1604 (1604) STC 19731; ESTC S114472 318,460 389

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

stands all true happinesse and ioy eternall Seeing it feared Iohn that he was as dead we see that the feeling of the presence of God of his maiestie and glory it is a singular meanes to humble man to cast him downe and make him know he is nothing in himselfe So soone as Iohn perceiued and saw the presence of Christ he was as dead fell at his feete So Abraham the more he perceiued the glory of God the more he humbled himselfe confessing he was dust and ashes And Peter Luke 5. 8 9 10. seeing but a glimmering of Christs maiestie and might he bids him depart frō him he was a sinner So Esa. 6. 2. the Angels couer thēselues with their wings with three they couered their face and with 3. their feet as fearing and not able to behold his maiesty as cōfessing they be nothing but sin in thēselues We see the great goodnes of God in the ministery of his word for though he might speake to vs by his own self and so that we could not abide to heare his voice but should be as dead men yet he in mercy speaketh to vs by sinfull men like to our selues and familarly then we must know and learne to acknowledge his mercy and be thankfull for it Seeing it astonished S. Iohn we see that euen holy and righteous men cannot abide the presence of Christ his maiestie and glory much lesse can the works of righteous men stand before his iust iudgement or answer to his iustice for the person must be first accepted before the worke can be accepted now if a righteous man cannot abide the presence of Christ no more can his worke Then damnable is the doctrine of the Church of Rome who will haue men to stand at Gods bar and bring their workes as part of their iustification but our workes be but in part holy no more then we be our selues but in part iust Now followeth the effect of this feare in S. Iohns body He fel at his feete as dead It was not a small but a great feare which astonished his senses made him as a dead man Phisitions say that the mind followeth the constitution and temperature of the body but we may here as truly say the body followeth the temperature and constitution of the mind for the mind can worke that on the body which other diseases can worke it can cast men into a swound make the body cold and many other things which diseases work in the body So Ahab being grieued and fearing he could not get Naboths vineyard was sick and almost dead So then affections of loue and feare and hatred c. can change kill the body therfore the body followeth the tēperature and constitution of the mind Againe we see diseases are not alwayes to be cured by art and phisicke but often when phisicke cannot helpe the body is cured by ordering and composing the affections of the heart seeing these can order and dispose the body and change it as their nature is Thē in the next place followeth the kind of feare I fel at his feet as dead c. shewing it was a godly religious reuerence in the heart of Iohn for this kind of prostrating the body is a signe of godly reuerence and religious feare We must learne by this example to cast downe our selues in the presence of Christ as Iohn did and to lie prostrate at his feet Ob. But some may say Christ is not present we cannot now fall at his feet seeing he is in heauen Answ. Though Christ be now in heauen yet he hath his footstoole on earth and his feet may be said to be here on earth For the mercie seate that was a signe of Gods presence though that be taken away God hath yet his footstoole on earth Psal. 99. 5. For wheresoeuer the Church of God is assembled to pray vnto him there is Christ truly present and there is his footstoole and there should we cast downe our selues our soules and bodies to Christ he being there present Now though S. Iohns feare be a godly feare yet it is stained with sin for it is ioyned with immoderate feare of death Then we see that the most holy affections of righteous men they haue their imperfections they be stained with sinne because they be sanctified but in part and in part be corrupt And there is no man which hath true filiall feare but he hath withall a seruile feare of hell and damnation The meanes follow whereby Christ confirmeth Iohn Then he laid his right hand In this note two things first when he vseth this meanes secondly the meanes it selfe The time when Then that is after Christ by his presence had smitten him cast him downe and laid him as dead then he vseth meanes of confirmation and comfort And this is Gods practise first to humble a man and cast him downe breake him and bruise him to powder then he hauing made him plyable and fit to receiue grace after confirmeth and comforteth him in the matter of saluation secondly a man must be wounded then haue oyle powred in and he must be a lost sheepe after Christ will bring him home againe And this is the cause why so few profit by the word preached and by the Sacraments because they be not first humbled and cast downe and made fit to receiue Christ comfortably offering himselfe in the Gospell Now follow the meanes themselues which are two the first a signe Then he laid his right hand c. secondly his word saying Feare not c. There is not one of them vsed a part neither the signe nor the word alone but he vseth both meanes more to confirme and comfort S. Iohn So the Lord dealt with Moses Exod. 3. 12. he first giueth him the word I will be with thee to comfort thee and not onely that but the signe he must offer sacrifice to God as a signe So to Ahaz though a wicked king he giueth him his word to comfort and confirme him and vers 11. he biddeth him aske a signe of him So Christ preached the Gospell there is his word and confirmeth the same by miracles Now he giueth vs promises of eternall life and not onely that but addeth signes and seales to confirme them namely his Sacraments By this we see that Christ hath exceeding care of his children and of his Church Seeing he vseth al meanes to confirme them and to comfort them he giueth them not onely his word which might be sufficient but for our weaknesse he addeth signes to confirme vs condescending thus to our capacitie to take from vs all doubtings and to giue vs assurance euen out of the maner of vsing the meanes as here first he vseth the signe 2. the word then he putteth his hand on Iohn to assure him of his protection and after biddeth him not to feare By this order we see that the very assurance of Gods presence and protection is a present remedie against all feare
accursed that the Iewes might be saued Againe they vrge If the righteous turne from his righteousnes he shall die ergo a righteous man may perish To these words I answer there is a double righteousnes one of the outward action another of the person the first is when a man keepeth the whole law outwardly in respect of men the second in that a mans person is righteous by Christs righteousnesse before God A man may haue the first and yet be an hypocrite and so it is meant here of the first not of the second by which mā is in deed righteous before God Ans. 2. It must be vnderstood of them which esteemed themselues righteous they pleaded that their fathers sinned they were punished so that they pretended they were iust but were not so indeed Another place is Luke 8. 13. there be some which beleeued for a time Ans. There are three kinds of faith as also of beleeuers historicall temporall and true sauing faith in the first is knowledge assent to the word yet no great ioy or reioycing in the second is also ioyned ioy and reioycing to the assent with approbation but in sauing faith there is also apprehension of the promise of God to our selues which is not in the other Now as of faith so of beleeuers there be three kinds one which knoweth the word and giueth assent to it yet hath no great loue or liking of it the second he loueth it reioyceth in it but apprehendeth not the promise but the third he beleeueth loueth and apprehendeth the promise Now the two first may fall away but the last cannot fall away and Luke is to be vnderstood of the two first not of the last But they obiect and say there is but one God and one faith therefore all faith is one Phil. 4. Answ. That is there is but one faith one doctrine of saluation and one religion so faith is vsed in the word and so it must be here vnderstood Secondly they proue it by exāples as first of Adam secondly of Dauid Adam he had grace sufficient yet he in his innocencie fell from God therefore much more we which haue not so much grace as he had Ans. Though he had greater measure of grace yet we haue more certaine and sure priuiledges of grace then he had first he had his grace by creation we by redemption which is greater then creation secondly he had the first grace not the second but we haue the first grace and the second too by promise which preserueth vs in the first grace Phil. 1. 6. 2. Thes. 1. The Lord is faithfull to establish vs to keepe vs from euill God giueth the first grace to beleeue and repent and the second to make vs to continue in the same They obiect Dauid fell from grace by two great sins one of adulterie the other of pride Answ. He fell grieuously and the graces of God were sore decayed weakned and wounded in him not cleane extinguished for then he should haue contēned God his word and religion despaired of mercie which he did not This sheweth he had the remnants of grace in his heart still though weakened and wounded Ob. 1. But he prayeth God to create in him a new heart Psal. 51. therefore he had cleane lost grace Answ. Dauid speaketh there as he felt himselfe not as he was in respect of God for he felt in his conscience much trouble and Gods wrath against him 2. Ob. But he repented not of a whole yeare Now no repentance no pardon and no pardon no grace Answ. The gift of repentance was in him when he fell and after but the practise of it shewed it selfe not till that time that the Prophet came to him he wanted not repentance simply but new repentance in practise for that fact Their third argument is from equitie of nature common reason a child of God may become the member of an harlot now one cannot be the member of God and of the diuell therefore a man may fall finally Ans. There be three sorts of mēbers a dead a decayed and a liuely member the first is as a leg of wood or brasse the second as an arme or leg taken with a palsey the third a mouing and liuely member as an hand sound and ready to moue So in Christ there is a dead mēber which is only in shew not in deed secondly a member decaied dying but not dead as a man by sin taken with a spiritual palsey which can not feele grace flowing frō Christ thirdly a liuely mēber which feeleth and liueth in Christ. Now a liuely member of Christ can not be the member of an harlot but a decaied member which is in the midst betweene dead and aliue that is the member of Christ and the member of an harlot but being not dead but dying shall be quickned againe so a man is made the member of Christ spiritually but the member of an harlot by carnall maner They say further if that men be so certaine of their saluation that they cannot fall away then this shewes there is no need of the word no need of preaching and exhortation Ans. Though a man be certaine he cannot fall away yet preaching and exhorting haue their vse not onely to worke grace but also to make men constant in grace and to perseuere to the end and though a man be certaine of his saluation yet he must vse the meanes Paul Act. 28. he knew that not one in the ship should perish yet there must not one go out of the ship Esay 38 tels Hezechiah he should recouer but he must vse the meanes and so he did But say they this doctrine maintaineth grosse securitie to teach that men are sure they cannot fall Ans. There is a double securitie one of the flesh when a man giues himselfe to the pleasures and profits of this world hauing no care or conscience of his owne saluation secondly there is a securitie of faith when one relieth wholy on Christ in the matter of saluation Now seeing that doctrine maintaines securitie not of the flesh but a spirituall securitie of faith and peace of conscience it is not to be disliked for it is a mans chiefe felicitie when a man in life and death relieth wholy on Christ. Thus the answer to the question is that a true beleeuer cannot loose faith nor fall away from grace wholly or finally but in part and for a time Seeing this decaying of loue was in this famous Church founded and preserued by the Apostles then much more is it rife in our Church seeing we haue not the like measure of grace that they had then we must looke to our selues see how we decay in loue to God and to our neighbour if we do then we shall find that after long profession we haue decaied much in loue And if we can excuse our selues yet take heed of it for seeing this famous Church was subiect to it it cannot be but we
like a stocke I wil giue thē and make thē come therfore a man being effectually called he cannot either come or not come at his pleasure as though God did for his part offer man grace and will him to come yet he may refuse it and not come but if God call man cannot but come else Christ would not haue said I will giue him and make him come But they say Matth. 23. Christ saith to Ierusalem How oft would I c. but you would not Answ. He spake that not as he was God but as he was a Prophet or the Minister of circumcision to the Iewes Againe say they Act. 27. they resisted the holy Ghost Ans. That is the doctrine of the Apostles and Prophets which was indicted by the holy Ghost not the spirit of God himselfe for no inferior power can resist a superior To come to the next Who be conuerted Namely a certaine synagogue of the Iewes at Philadelphia which said they were worshippers of Christ yet indeed were the synagogue of Satan and bond-slaues of the diuell Here we see not onely small but great and old sinners may repent and be saued Christ he died for all kinds of sinners great rebellious and obstinate if they can repent they may be conuerted and come to Christ. 2. Thess. 2. 26. they must waite for the repentance of those which were taken in the diuels snares so as he would wish them no surer Rom. 1. some were giuen ouer to a reprobate sense yet it is likely that some of them repented Then we see great grieuous and notorious sins may be forgiuen yet we must not abuse the grace of God to liue in sinne but gather comfort hence that though we be great sinners yet if we can repent there is mercie with the Lord no sin can hinder vs from Christ. We reade that Christ healed three sorts of dead men some when they went to the graue some buried and some which lay foure dayes and stanke as Lazarus did So Christ healeth all kind of persons he calleth men of all sorts euen them which lie stinking in sinnes and are almost rotten in them Then take the benefite of Christs exceeding mercie when he calleth thee to repent come and cast away thy sinne though thou be a vassal of Satan a man rotten in sin yet Christ hath mercy infinit he can heale and help thee and he came to call not those which think they be righteous but such as are penitent sinners to take them out of the Lions paw and to saue the lost sheepe of Israel Then abuse not this exceeding mercie but blesse his Maiestie for it and vse it as a meanes to repent to bring thee to newnesse of life to breake off thy sin and to make thee a liuely member in Iesus Christ. I will make them come and worship Now followeth the third point in the conuersion of a sinner namely the good fruites of their repentance and conuersion I will make them worship These words are expounded 1. Cor. 14. 25. where the children of God prophecying there cometh in an vnlearned man he falleth downe and worshippeth so here he will cause these wicked Iewes to come and fall downe and worship and adore the true God in the congregation of Gods church and people In these words note two fruites of conuersion the first concernes God the second the church of God and the members of the same For the first to worship God it is a true fruite of a conuerted sinner which no man can truly performe as he ought till he be conuerted to wit to worship and adore God in the companie of his saints people The natural man knoweth that there is a God that this God must be worshipped but to worship him as he ought it is a worke that none but he which is truly conuerted can performe Another may performe outward worship heare the word receiue the sacraments but true worship which is in the heart and spirit for God is a spirit that he cannot performe Now for the worship of God three properties are to be noted in these words first They shall come and worship not worship simply but come signifying that the true worship of God must be voluntary willing and cheerefull not of constraint or compulsion but as though there were no law or iudgment for them if they did not Psa. 110. they came freely not by compulsion Then we see how most men come short for men are not touched with loue of the word neuer or seldome come to heare it onely come to morning or euening Prayer because if they do not the law wil compell them These are no true worshippers of God for he cannot abide any worshippers but willing and voluntary And worship That is reuerence God with bowing the body or knee and this is the second property we must expresse our reuerence in conuenient and seemely bowing of the body or the knee Then we see this is not a thing indifferent but necessary to vse meete and conuenient gesture of the bodie in the seruice of God to bow downe and prostrate our selues our soule and bodie Esay 6. the Angels in the presence of God couer their feete with three wings and their face with other three testifying their reuerence and adoration in the worship of God So must Gods people worship him in soule and bodie c. But we come short in this dutie for whereas we should vse seemely and conuenient gesture of the bodie to shew our reuerence and humilitie we see many lie snorting and leaning on their elbowes others vnreuerently with their heads couered which ought to be bare for God is a God of soule and bodie therefore we must reuerence him with both Before thy feet This is the third propertie namely in the congregation of Gods people they shall prostrate themselues at their feet in hearing the word or prayer they must be humbled the pride of their hearts beaten downe be smitten with feare of Gods Maiestie and of their owne sinnes Act. 16. 29. The Iaylor ouer night put Paule into prison but in the morning finding all the prison doores open and thinking all the prisoners to be gone he would haue killed himself Now being thus astonished and affraid Paule preacheth the Gospell to him which before he contemned but now being smitten with feare of the Maiestie of God he heareth Paule willingly with trembling and cometh kneeling and crowching to him saying What shall I do c. And vntill a man be smitten downe with feare of Gods glorious Maiestie with sense of his iudgements for his sinnes and so come to humble himselfe he cannot be a true beleeuer of Gods will and word The cause why there be so few true professors and that all serue God with formall worship is because they were neuer cast downe they were neuer smitten with feare of Gods Maiestie neuer confounded for their owne sinnes for till these be in vs in some sort we cannot worship God we cannot
he vsed meanes to enter when they had barred him out Marke the vnspeakeable mercie of Christ they by their sinnes stopt Christ from entring yet he pursueth them with mercie and offereth mercie to them that refused it and contented themselues to lie and liue in their sinnes When Adam had sinned and fled from God the Lord sought him out and made a couenant of grace with him So Esay 65. the Lord saith he was found of them that neuer sought him they that neuer dreamed of mercie sound mercie In the parable of the lost sheep that sheep which was left as a prey to the wild beasts Christ sought it vp and brought it home All these places tend to one end to shew the infinite mercie of Christ. This is true in all churches yea in this of ours If we haue mercie we haue it before we seeke it nay when we refuse it as much as in vs lieth This should be an occasion to stirre vp our hearts to magnifie Christ for his mercie we should not let passe such considerations as these but rather breake out into praise of Gods loue and mercie which is a bottomlesse sea Quest. It may be demaunded how he knockes Answ. The words precedent shew the sense for these words haue relation to them He said before he would spue them out then he giueth them counsell Now by so sharpe a rebuke they might haue despaired therefore he shewes that by this threatning and rebuke and counsell he knockes that they might perceiue they were not tokens of wrath but of mercie So then this knocking is nothing else but the reproofe threatning and counsell vsed before He knocketh when it pleaseth him to make men see their sinne by such things Here then we are to marke the state of al people which haue the ministerie of the word they haue Christ among them and he standeth at the doore and knocketh at euery mans heart All threatnings of the law reproofes of sin exhortations admonitions and promises they are so many knockes of Christ. A great vnspeakeable mercie that the King of heauen and earth should do this Now then doth Christ knocke thus by preaching promises and threatnings c. then we must not be so dull dead and backward but shew more zeale If any man of great place and calling knocke at your doores what stirring is there that you may receiue him as is meete Then what a shame is this when Christ vouchsafeth to deale thus mercifully with vs Againe in that Christ cometh by the ministery of the Gospell to work our conuersion it serueth to admonish vs to turne with all speed for we know not how long he will stand and reach forth the hand of his ministerie to beate vpon our hearts Marke further this knocking is not a light and soft kind of knocking but it goeth with crying he both knocketh and crieth it is an earnest knocking of one that would faine enter Seeing then Christ standing at the doore of mens hearts knocketh so earnestly to saue mens soules we againe ought to be earnest to receiue and embrace the Gospell He knocketh in good earnest and we must accordingly by Gods grace be as earnest So much for the first token of Christs loue his desire of their conuersion which he sheweth by two signes first his waiting secondly his knocking and that ioyned with crying If any man c. Now followeth the second token namely a promise of fellowship with them after their conuersion These words haue bene much abused therefore I wil stand a litle to set downe the meaning Marke the forme of speech it is such as seemeth to giue a man an action in his owne conuersion whereby he comes and receiues Christ. So it attributes to mans will an action as if he should say I for my part stand and knocke if therefore any man heare c. This may seeme strange that such an action should be attributed to a mā that is dead in sin But this speech is vsed for iust cause for in the conuersion of a sinner there be three agents first the holy Ghost secondly the word thirdly mans will The principal agent and worker is the holy Ghost which changeth the mind and will from euill to good the will by nature willing nothing but that which is against the will of God Secondly the word which is an instrument of the holy Ghost for he works not now ordinarily by reuelation or speciall instinct and inspiration but when a man is reading or hearing the word and applying it to his heart then the holy Ghost workes in and by the word that being the power of God to saluation frō faith to faith Thirdly the wil though it be dead by nature can do nothing of it self yet when the holy Ghost begins to moue it it moues it self and striues to be altered whē God moues it We must not think mās wil is like a peece of wax which hath no actiō but only passiuely receiues and impression but the will being disposed moues and stirres it selfe Euen as fire so soone as it is kindled it burnes and as soone as it burnes is fire so when God hath once giuen grace the will moueth the mind seeth and acknowledgeth sin and the will inclined by the holy Ghost begins a strife against sin and makes a man endeuour to please God so much as he can So the will in the very first conuersion hath his action though not by nature but by grace Now considering these three actions concurre in the conuersion of a sinner hence it is that actions are ascribed to sinners which are to be conuerted as here and in manie other places not that they can do any thing of themselues without Christ but when they are wrought vpon by the holy Ghost Thus a man hath a free will in his first conuersiō by grace as fire hath some effects of fire so soone as euer it is kindled therefore it is said Repent and beleeue to impenitent persons not because they can do it of themselues but because when it shall please the holy Ghost to worke it in their hearts by the word they can turne and vse good meanes This is the cause why the holy Ghost ascribes an action to such persons when God giues grace to receiue Christ then it receiueth Christ when God opens the heart by that grace it is enabled to receiue Christ. This being the true meaning of these words let vs see how this text hath bene abused first by Papists which gather hereupō that a man hath free will in his conuersion by nature that he hath and that is the faith which sets open the heart wide to receiue Christ. Thus if you shall humble your selues and acknowledge your vnworthinesse and lay hold on Christ with true faith and testifie it by feruent loue to Christ and his members then shall your hearts be open indeed and you shall receiue Christ. Thus much for the true meaning of the condition It followeth I
none excepted shall come and stand before the tribunall seate of Christ. This is a comfort to Gods children in that they being dead rotten in their graues shall rise and receiue their life and motiō and see Christ their Sauiour and Iudge of all men If a man should lie downe to sleepe and be told that when he rose he should see his dead father and mother or his dearest friends this would be a notable comfort to him that so he should inioy them againe but this should be a farre greater comfort to vs that we which lie dead and rotten in the graue shall be raised and enioy not our parents and friends but Christ Iesus the sonne of God which is our frind aboue all friends who shall giue vs not onely life and motion but eternall life with his owne maiestie This was Iobs comfort that though he died yet he beleeued he should see his redeemer with his eyes and this should be our comfort against the feare of death and the last iudgement It shall be a terror to the wicked to all impenitent sinners who shall wil they nil they be brought to the barre of Christs iudgement seate and then looke on him who is their Iudge whom they had in their life contemned And this consideration may serue to moue vs to repentance which haue not begun to repent and to labor to becom the members of Christ. We think when we die all is done there is no harme to follow but though we lie rotting in our graues a thousand or two thousand yeares yet we shall rise and if we repented not we shall heare the sentence of condemnation and looke vpon our Iudge with our owne eyes Then it is best for vs now in the time of grace while we liue here to prepare that we need not feare to come to appeare and behold this Iudge No doubt if we were perswaded that we should thus appeare it would moue vs to repent Euery eye shall see him Then here we see that all men with their owne eyes shall looke on him and those who wanted them in this life shall haue them restored It is graunted of all Diuines that the elect haue all their senses and other defects restored and it is to be added that the wicked too they shal haue all their powers senses and faculties of soule and body restored the deafe shall heare the blind shall see this Iudge but this can be no glory to them seeing it is to increase their punishment for the more senses they haue they haue the more punishment because we iudge of things by sense Euen of those which pierced him This is added first to shew that we shal be freed No power or wisedom of any man or monarch can free vs from appearing for if any could escape then the Iewes and Gentiles who preuailed most against Christ in that they put him to death but none of these can escape his iudgement for euen they which pierced him they shall see this Iudge be summoned before his maiestie for though they had power to kill him yet none of them shall haue power to absent themselues from before his barre 2 To shew the case of all wicked men namely that such wo and misery befals them as they neuer dreamed of The Iewes and Gentiles they crucified Christ and put him to a temporall death but they neuer dreamed he should condemne them to eternall death 3 To shew the rufull and wofull estate of all impenitent sinners for these men shall haue their greatest enemy to be their iudge who will shew rigour vpon them and iustice without all mercy and this is meant not only of the Iew which pierced him but of all impenitent sinners because all such do by their sins as swords and speares wound him at the heart as the souldiers did These be as bad as the Iewes which pierced Christ as Iudas which betrayed Christ as the souldiers which goared his sides Out of these words some gather that the body of Christ hath still the wounds and scarres which here he had giuen him the print of the nailes in his hands and in his feete and that these shall be seene in Christ at the last day and say that it is no infirmitie to Christ to haue these but rather an increase of his glory but this cannot be gathered hence for though it be said They shall see him whom they pierced yet not as he was pierced And because they shall see him shall they see his wounds Many shall see Kings and Queenes whom they crowned in this world ergo as Kings and Queenes So we shall see our fathers mothers therefore as fathers and mothers so many shall see Christ therefore as he was wounded and pierced It is no good collection nor opinion And all the tribes of the earth shall waile for him That is before or ouer him Here is the fruit and effect of his comming especially in the wicked All the tribes of the earth S. Iohn he speakes here of the world as it was in the condition and diuision of the land of Canaan for before that time it was not diuided into tribes So Math. 25. setteth out the iudgement of the whole world by the separation of the sheep from the goates noting that they which repented not of what tribe soeuer of what estate or condition shall waile and mourne And he addes a reason of this for him before him or ouer him that is they shal waile and lament with exceeding lamentation because they beleeued not his word but contemned his doctrine and therefore now they want all helpe to free them from the punishment of their vnbeleefe and contempt of the Gospell If they shall mourne because they did not beleeue and receiue the doctrine of Christ and for that haue no way to escape then it is our dutie to labour aboue all things to be reconciled to God in Christ to get our sinnes pardoned to beleeue and embrace the word of God for vnlesse we beleeue and be reconciled when the last day comes there is no hope of helpe no way to escape no time of grace to repent If the doore be once shut we must stand without there is nothing then but horror of conscience for vs it will be a day to vs to make our eyes start out of our heads a day of all woe and misery Then it is great wisdome so to spend the time of grace in this life especially that we may get the pardon of our sins reconciliation with God in Christ to receiue and beleeue his will and word which if we do we shall haue no cause at all to waile and mourne but be glad and reioyce Then we must take heed the Diuell steale not out of our hearts this one lesson which is most necessary which he wil most labour for to do See what an euill conscience is it lieth asleepe here while a man liues it neuer troubleth him but in
seeke to get one foot out of the graue of sinne and securitie And he had Here S. Iohn describeth him by his parts and the properties of euery part In his right hand seuen starres that is seuen Angels seuen Ministers of the seuen churches of Asia The Ministers are compared to starres first because as starres send out light to men on earth so the Ministers ought to giue light to men euen spirituall light by doctrine taught by them and by conuersatiō of life among them Secondly they be compared to stars because as the stars haue their continuall abode in heauen neuer descend downe so the Ministers of the word especially should haue their conuersation in heauen It is the dutie of all but more specially of the Ministers in regard of their callings first by seeking their owne saluation secondly by seeking the saluation of others by which two they must haue their conuersation in heauē though they haue their bodies in earth thirdly because they shall be honoured of God in heauen as the starres for Dan. 12. they which do their dutie they shall shine like starres in the firmament They be in Christs right hand that is all regiment and gouernement in matters of the Church belongs to Christ he alone hath the whole disposition and ordering of the ministery seeing he alone is head of the Church and the Ministers they be in his right hand he rules and raignes in his church he careth for it and looketh to it Seeing these starres be in Christs right hand this shewes that the choosing furnishing of the ministers of the word belongs to Christ Eph. 4. he giueth them their gifts and places then we ought in this last age to pray the Lord to send out laborers into his haruest that so his children might be gathered and an end made of these miserable dayes He holds these seuen starres in his right hand Whereby we see he giueth them defence and protection so long as they be faithful in their callings He carieth them in his right hand though they haue sundry discouragements yet seeing Christ he ordereth their ministery and disposeth of it if they be faithfull nothing should hinder their course nothing should cut them off from their duty neither the want of obediēce in them to whom they preach and labour not seeing that fruit they should nor the iniuries of the enemies of their profession nor any thing else Seeing they be in his right hand this sheweth the excellency of this calling of the ministery Idle men esteeme it most base accept of it as of a meane calling and so discourage many but in the sight of God it is an high and holy calling he carieth them in his right hand defends them and protects them Now what greater glory can there be then that they should be so honored to be borne and caried in the right hand of the King of heauen and earth though wicked men dishonour them esteeme so basely of thē This should stir those who haue good gifts to get this high and holy calling thus to be honoured of Christ. They must be vnblameable for seeing Christ carieth them in his right hand he will hold nothing but that which is holy and pure as he is but if it be defiled sinfull and wicked he will take it out of his right hand put it vnder his brazen foote and grind it to peeces and the more he had honoured them the more will he dishonour them By the same reason the hearers are bound to profit else they must drinke of the same cup for if the ministers be punished for not preaching then they for not hearing And out of his mouth c. In these words he describes him by the two last parts of his body his mouth and his face And in his mouth was a two edged sword c. By this two edged sword is meant the doctrine of the law and the Gospel vttered and propounded by the Prophets and Apostles and this two edged sword is described Heb. 4. 12. It is mightie in operation c. The doctrine of the law and the Gospell is compared to a two edged sword because as a sword with a double edge enters not onely into the flesh but to the bones yea euen to the marrow so the word preached it enters into the heart deepely to the diuiding of the spirits yea it enters to the very bottome of the heart it searcheth euery nooke and corner which is most secret The word hath a double operation one in the wicked another in the godly In the wicked this sharpe two edged sword of the word it wounds them at the heart with a deadly wound and so by the same wound brings them to eternall death Esa. 11. 4. He shall with his breath that is the sword of his word slay the wicked This is that sword that hath and will kill Antichrist Ob. But how cometh it that the word of God should wound or kill any how should it slay a wicked and vnrepentant sinner Answ. We must know there be three degrees of spirituall death The first is the separation of bodie and soule when the bodie is laid in the graue the soule conueyed to the place of torments The second is when a sinner in this life by the word is wounded and smitten and so receiueth in his heart a deadly wound The third degree is at the end of this life at the last iudgement whē soule and bodie shall go into hell fire for euen a sinner receiueth his deadly wound in this life which is the first steppe to hell and eternall death in the life to come In the inflicting and giuing of this wound there be three actions of Christ required which he worketh in the hearts of the wicked by the doctrine of the law and the Gospell The first is to reueale to them their sinnes all their pride rebellion hypocrisie the damnable corruptions of their hearts and all their sinnes against the first and second Table 1. Cor. 14. 24. 25. If in the Church all prophecie there come in one which beleeueth not he is rebuked of all because they iudge him an hypocrite and so the secrets and corruptions of his heart are laid open and discouered by the word preached The second action of Christ is this he after reuealeth to them the wrath and curse of God against sinne his indignation against the breakers of the law and for this cause the law is called the killing law because it sheweth iudgement without mercie for the transgressions of the law Thirdly Christ by the word preached sharpeneth the sting of conscience maketh it awake and terrifieth a man when he heareth or remembreth the word and the curse denounced against sinners So Felix when Paul preached to him of iustice and temperancie he fainted and trembled the word was a two edged sword of the spirit to wound his conscience with terrour and feare So Dan. 5. Beltashar seeing but an hand writing he
the affection of Christ which things I also hate that is not their persons but their errors Which thing I hate First he teacheth vs to auoide and dislike the least honour or approbation which can be giuen to idols for these Nicolaitanes did not honour idols or offer to them but came into their temples and inuited by their friends did eate of the meate offered to them yet Christ hateth their dealing shewing he wold haue vs to do the like This also condemneth the practise of the Church of Rome who say they worship not idols yet they kneele downe to the images of Christ and Saints adore them light candles and tapers to them offer to them hang costly iewels about their neckes cloth them with costly apparell and so do indeed farre more then the Nicolaitanes did therefore hath Christ cause to hate them much more This also teacheth men which trauell to take heed that they trauell not without any calling to see newes out of the limits of the Church as to Spaine and Italie for then they being out of the bounds of the true Church offer themselues to occasions which may bring them to idolatrie though they hate images for being in idolatrous places they must come into their temples and do as their maner is offer to idols and kneele downe to them which they cannot without some approbation whereas they should hate the least approbation or liking of them Then it is good for men which trauell to trauell within the Church and not out but by some speciall calling and necessitie Further by this Christ would haue vs to hate all familiar societie with idolaters A man may I graunt liue with Idolaters in a ciuill course of peace but not to haue a speciall kind of familiaritie and amitie with them Now as Christ hated their idolatry so did he their fornicatiō giuing vs example to hate fornication first because our bodies are not our owne but the bodie of a faithfull man or woman is the bodie of Christ he hath bought it therefore we must consecrate and dedicate them to honour him not Satan his enemy Our bodie and soule is the member of Christ at least by profession then we must not take the member of Christ and make it the member of an harlot Our bodie and soule is the house and temple of the holy Ghost therefore we must keepe them faire pure and cleane fit to entertaine such a guest but they which pollute themselues with fornication make them sties and stables for the diuell Repent quickely Hauing laid downe the fault of the Church of Pergamus and the errors of the Nicolaitanes here he sheweth the remedie to escape and after the remedie addeth two reasons to moue thē to practise the remedie the first cōcerning the whole Church of Pergamus the second the Nicolaitans In the remedie note first what repentance is secondly why it is so often prescribed by Christ to his Church thirdly to whom To repent properly is to change the mind from euill to good from sinne to God thus when by Gods grace a man hath this purpose in his heart not to sin as before but in all things wholly to do the will of God for euer But here repentance as commonly in the Scripture is taken more largely for all the duties which go with or are in repentance as first humiliation confession of our sinnes condemning our selues for them secondly inuocation for pardon of them thirdly reformation of life when a man purposeth and indeuoreth in his life to do the will of God But why doth Christ so often repeate and prescribe repentance to his Church Ans. Not because it is a meanes to procure or demerit saluation and reconciliation with God for onely the death and passion of Christ and his merits alone can do that but he calleth them often to this dutie because it is the most excellent fruite of faith Repentance of it selfe procureth not Gods fauour but it is a token of Gods fauour procured in Christ. Secondly because it is a path way wherein all men must walke which must haue pardon of their sinnes and life euerlasting But to whom doth Christ prescribe repentance Ans. First to the whole church of Pergamus secondly to the Nicolaitanes As for the Church of Pergamus the Ministers and people thereof Christ before had commended them for worthie graces they had repentance before yet Christ bids them repent still Now in that he prescribeth repentance still to a repentant people it sheweth vs that the whole life of a Christian is a continuall practise of repentance a daily and perpetuall repentance When one hath begunne and repented once that is not enough but as euery day addeth to our age so euery day for our new sinnes we must haue new repentance 1. Cor. 5. Paule desired them to labour to be reconciled to God Now 1. Cor. 6. they were reconciled alreadie and had true repentance noting that they must labour to haue their reconciliation more increased in regard of the certaintie of it and their daily offences and sinnes Now we must thinke that what Christ spake to the Church of Pergamus is spoken to vs and if we be in the like sin we must learne to performe the same dutie which they are commanded here Christ moreouer prescribeth this not onely to the Church of Pergamus but to the Nicolaitanes which held two damnable errors and as they held them no doubt they liued accordingly yet Christ biddeth them repent Then great and grieuous sinners are not barred from Gods mercie if they will repent Excellent is that of Esay Our God is much exceeding much in mercie Psalm 130. God is much in mercie plenteous in redemption no man which is a grieuous sinner but God offereth him mercie if he will repent and lay hold on it Among vs in this Church are many ignorant and euill people yet if these will repent the Lord offereth his mercie though they be as wicked as the Nicolaitanes as Iudas or Herode were yet Christ offereth his mercie and merite if they will lay hold on it Then let all such wicked men breake off their sins by repentance of their idolatrie blasphemie fornication and humble themselues with Iob in dust and ashes and they shall find mercie But we must not abuse Gods mercie to presumption but be sure that though thy sinnes be as scarlet or crimson or as scarlet which can take no other colour yet there is mercie in store to helpe thee if thou repent This doctrine may be taught to malefactors not to imbolden them in sinne but to assure them that if they repent at any time the Lord will heare them yea though a man fall often into the same sinne which is dangerous yet if he haue grace to repent Gods fountaine of mercie is not drawne dry but still he hath in store onely they must repent for if they looke to haue the merit of Christ Christ looketh to haue their repentance Else I will come against thee